add support for negative pattern matching in @^{/<pattern>} style
revision specifiers. So now you can find the first commit whose message
doesn't match a pattern, complementing the existing positive matching.
e.g.:
$ git rebase -i @^{/!^WIP}
My use-case is in having a "work, work, work, rebase, push"-style
workflow, which generates a lot of "WIP foo" commits. While rebasing is
usually handled via "git rebase -i origin/master", occasionally I will
already have several "good, but not yet ready to push" commits hanging
around while I finish work on related commits. In these situations, the
ability to quickly "git diff @^{/!^WIP}" to get an overview of all
changes "since the last one I was happy with", can be useful.
Reading through the history of this type of revision specifier, it feels
like a negative match was always thought of as potentially useful
someday, but didn't fit well with the original patch's limitations
(namely: always searching across all refs).
Will Palmer (2):
test for '!' handling in rev-parse's named commits
object name: introduce '^{/!<negative pattern>}' notation
Documentation/revisions.txt | 7 ++++---
sha1_name.c | 22 ++++++++++++++++------
t/t1511-rev-parse-caret.sh | 45 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
3 files changed, 64 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)
--
2.3.0.rc1
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